AI, Canada
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Canada new roadmap for how it plans to adopt AI over the next decade includes "large-scale" data centres, free AI literacy programme and billions in funding.
The gap between talking about AI-native delivery and actually achieving it comes down to who is making judgment calls in the middle.
Announcing the "AI for All" strategy, Prime Minister Mark Carney said the government wants to ensure AI benefits all Canadians and not just a select few.
As AI adoption accelerates, the key competitive bottleneck is shifting from models and GPUs to electricity itself. AI’s economics are becoming increasingly industrial: Competitive advantage now depends not just on access to intelligence but on access to the physical infrastructure required to produce it,
At a deeper level, AI has tended to be perceived as a technology deployment rather than an enterprise capability.
Canada launched its AI for All strategy, targeting $200 billion in growth, 250,000 AI jobs, stronger AI safeguards and sovereign technology infrastructure.
A new study shines a light on how corporate silos can lead to issues with how brands show up in AI search
Anthropic warns self-improving AI could emerge sooner than expected and proposes coordinated pause plan among major AI labs to maintain safety oversight.
Magnifica Humanitas offers Catholic health systems a framework for governance, accountability and human-centered care.
Meta is building AI data centers inside giant fabric tents to bring computing capacity online in roughly half the usual time, according to satellite imagery and city permits surfaced on June 4 by Cleanview Energy founder Michael Thomas.
A feature conversation with Evan Solomon, Canada’s Minister of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation about AI safety and jobs.